Carolina Blawg

Just in time for the fall semester we have many of the major legal treatises and desk books you need all in one place, your mobile device! That's right, you can download high-demand legal texts to your device and (coming soon) highlight and add your own notes.

Need to spend quality screen time curled up with Nimmer on Copyright, Corbin on Contracts, Collier on Bankruptcy, or North Carolina Criminal Procedure? Need a mobile version of the North Carolina General Statutes? Look no further.

This post is my second in
a series about Casetext. If you didn’t
get a chance to read my first post, check it out here.

In this post, I discuss
my experience using Casetext’s Case Analysis Research Assistant (CARA). CARA is an artificial intelligence research
tool that examines a brief, complaint, or memo you’ve uploaded and returns case
results that are based on the same facts, legal issue, and jurisdiction.

Calling all law students! Have you heard of the newest
legal research database Casetext? If not, listen up! Dedicated to “eliminating inefficiencies in
legal research,” Casetext was developed with litigators in mind, but it is
intended for use by all types of legal researchers, including law students.

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